'A warm welcome': P.E.I.'s efforts to find nurses overseas a success, with 107 new hires - Action News
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PEI

'A warm welcome': P.E.I.'s efforts to find nurses overseas a success, with 107 new hires

Provincial agency says it's hired 11 internationally educated nursing staff to work in the Island's health-care system, with 96 more signing contracts.

11 recently hired nurses are working now, with 96 more signing conditional contracts

Man with glasses stands in front of a window.
Ryan White, Health P.E.I.'s director of talent management, says his agency's goal is to recruit 200 new nurses to the Island by mid-2025. (Stacey Janzer/CBC)

Health P.E.I.'s efforts to address a shortage of nurses on the Island by looking overseas appear to be paying off with more than 100 new hires.

The province's recruitment efforts have now recruited 11 new internationally educated health workers, with another96 nurses trained overseas also signingcontracts, according to the agency.

"They've signed a conditional job-offer contract with a commitment to come to P.E.I. through 2023," said Ryan White, Health P.E.I.'s director of talent management.

Hisgoalis to bring 10 internationally educated nurses to the province every month, he said. The new recruits are getting government assistance and temporary housing to help them settle here.

White added that some workers cannot come immediately because they mustgive between 90 to 180 days' notice to leavetheir current employment elsewhere.

He said with the immigration process to Canada taking anywhere from three to six months, nurses overseas can also face "financial constraints for themselves to prepare for them for the move."

A number of Island nurses retiring soon, and high turnover rates, have Health P.E.I. saying it needs to recruit 200 nurses by mid-2025.

That number includes this year's expected107 new overseas hires, as well as those from a recruitment effort in Dubai in February. White said the goal of that trip was to hire 50 to 60 nurses, which he said was a success.

"We want to fill our vacancies as quick as we can," he said. "But we also don't want to overwhelm the system either."

Local housing is also a concern, White said, so new recruits are being provided temporary housing for 60 days, and the province is offering someleeway if settling here takes longer.

So far, he said, four families have found housing within a few weeks, one before they even landed on P.E.I.

"Obviously coming into the summer months housing is a bit more difficult," said White. "We delay a little, we push off a little bit.

"We've been very fortunate, we have secured some temporary housing within P.E.I. through landlords and whatnot."

It's too early to know the retention levels for the new international hires,White said, butabout 19 per cent of the initial Dubai cohort have since backed out. He expects the trendto stay around that rate.

His work doesn't stop at recruitment and housing either. Staff coming from another country won't have an existingsocial network, so he hopes the Island's community steps up to welcome them.

"We have an opportunity to engage," he said. "We should extend our hands in friendship, and give them all a warm welcome into our communities so we can set them up for success."